Cowboy Poetry
by
John P. Doran
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It was late October, winter coming on, and the hills were dry and brown.
The clouds were roiling south, must be a 'norther blowing in.
I hunched my shoulders, turned my collar up to try and stop the cold.
And the sky was bruised and blackened, yet shafts of light cut to the ground,
The sound of distant voices, long gone like shifting sand,
The hoof beats in the distance, unshod ponies racin' free.
And the years scattered like wild seed as the cattle herds arrived,
How many went before us, their names are lost 'cross the years;
Their mark they left across these hills, I find them as I ride;
The debris of lives lived long ago, discarded like so many dreams;
But still their voices ride the wind, so many times I've heard the sigh;
I climbed back in the saddle, turned my pony's head for home;
And I'm not you know, for they ride with me on the wind that brings the snow.
The Earth will spin and years will pass, I too will turn to dust;
A hundred years from now or more, a cowboy will ride along,
He'll stare off in the distance across the hills the snow-capped peaks;
The clouds will turn that same sky dark, like many times before.
And he'll feel the same spirit at this place I've often called my own.
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